Title: The Art of Heterogenous Catalytic Hydrogenation Part 2
1The Art of Heterogenous Catalytic
HydrogenationPart 2
2Topics to be covered
- Applications of Heterogenous Catalytic Reductions
- Simple Reductions
- Differential reductions
- hydrogenolysis
- Equipment
- Tour of the High Pressure Lab
3Recommended Books
Heterogenous Catalysis for the Synthetic Chemist
Robert L Augustine (1996) Good for theory,
kinetics, applications Equipment Practical
Catalytic Hydrogenation, Techniques and
Applications Morris Freifelder 1971 Alchemic
secrets of success
4Recommended References
- Catalytic Hydrogenation over Platinum Metals
- P. N. Rylander 1967
5Factors That Impact Reduction Choices
- Functional group reduced
- Local structure
- Presence of other reducible groups
- Products that act as inhibitors/poisons
- Desirability of hydrogenolysis as one of the
actions - Equipment limitations
6Olefins
- Under mild conditions, ease of reduction can be
correlated inversely with degree of substitution
(except when conjugated) - RHCCH2 , RHCCHR gt R2CCHR gt R2CCR2
- Many different catalysts reduce double bonds.
- The key to differentiating reduction of double
bonds is monitoring equivalents hydrogen consumed.
7Olefins continued
- Bond migrations prior to reduction are common and
may result in scrambling of nearby
stereochemistry (Requires H2!) - Certain groups act as directors
8Bond Migration More with Ni, Pd, less with Pt
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10Access to catalyst surface influences
stereochemistry
11Catalyst approach OH blocks Pd but favors Ni
12Hydrogen Addition is from the Least Hindered Side
13Selective Reduction of Polyenes
- Pd and Ni often cause bond migration
- Greatly influenced by local structure
- Conjugated di- and polyenes give mixtures except
in special cases
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15Catalyst Addition is in Equilibrium
16Effect of Solvent and Pressure on Stereochemistry
- Solvent Percent cis Product
- Low H2 Press High H2 Press
- n-Hexane 77 48
- DMF 86 75
- tert-Butyl Alcohol 91 48
- Ethanol 78 48
- 0.3 N HCl/Ethanol 91 80
- 0.3 N NaOH 50 50
17Alkyne Reduction
- Usual catalysts Lindlars (Pd/CaCO3) Pd/BaSO4,
Nickel boride, Cu and Co. - Selectivity for cis reduction Pd gtRh gtPt gt Rugt
Ir - Quinoline commonly used as a modifier.
18Reduction of Alkynes a Game of Relative Rate
19Alkyne Reduction
20Aromatic Reduction
- Catalyst Activity Rh gt Ru gt Pt gt Ni gt Pd gt Co
- Ru minimizes C-O and C-N hydrogenolysis.
- C-Halide bonds do not survive aromatic reductions
- Correct choice of conditions allows other
functionalities to survive
21Aromatic Reduction
22Phenols to Cyclohexanones thin film on catalyst
modifies products
23Ring Differentiation in Aromatic Reduction
24Ring Differentiation in Aromatic Reduction
25Ring Differentiation in Aromatic Reduction
26Other Aromatic Reductions
27Other Aromatic Reductions
28Heterocyclic Reductions
29Some Functional Group Reductions faster than
Aromatic
30Reductive Amination
31Reductive Amination
- Takes advantage of relative ease of imine
reduction. - Takes advantage of equilibrium between imine and
ketone in presence of an amine. - Some aldehydes produce significant byproducts of
diamine and polymers. - Use of one eq. acid improves yield of primary
amine
32Reductive Amination
- Raney Nickel is the catalyst of choice
- Palladium, Rhodium and Platinum do not perform as
well as RaNi - Ruthenium on carbon has been used successfully
- Use of 1 eq. ammonium acetate or HOAc
significantly improves results - Aromatic Halides have been reported to survive
conditions (using Rhodium) - Can be done on sensitive aromatics, like furan.
33Reductive Amination
34Reductive Amination
35Hydrogenolysis
- Reductive cleavage of sigma bonds
- C-C, C-N, C-O, C-S and others
- Choice of catalyst, structure of substrate, and
solvent greatly influence whether double bond
reduction continues on to hydrogenolysis.
36Carbon-Carbon Hydrogenolysis
37Carbon-Carbon Hydrogenolysis
38Halogen Weakens Opposite bond
39C-O Hydrogenolysis
- Generally benzyl alcohols, ethers and esters
- Often facilitated by acid
- Frequently occurs in competition with aromatic
ring reduction - Palladium favors hydrogenolysis while platinum
favors ring reduction.
40C-O Hydrogenolysis
41Contrasting Pt with Pd
42C-O Hydrogenolysis
43C-O Hydrogenolysis
44Carbonyl Hydrogenolysis
45C-N Hydrogenolysis
46C-N Hydrogenolysis
47Parr Shaker Demo and HP Lab Tour
48Hydrogenolysis Carbon-Carbon